~ A weekly guide to Bach cantatas according to the Lutheran Church year

The Crown on Bach’s 1723 Trinity season

The Last Judgment by Dutch painter Lucas van Leyden, 1526-1527. Currently on special exhibit in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam until September 1, 2018 (link for more information at the very end of this post)

When Bach accepted his post in Leipzig, he knew that between the first Sunday in Advent (next week!) and Christmas Day, there wasn’t to be any music in the churches in that city. However, among the goods he moved with him to Leipzig on May 22, 1723, there was a stack of several beautiful Advent cantata manuscripts from his Weimar period (1714-1716), and I think he was eager to perform all this music for the much larger audience he had in Leipzig than the small entourage of the Duke of Weimar that would have heard the music there. So he reworked and expanded several of those Weimar Advent cantatas for other times of the church year in Leipzig.

The Weimar Advent cantatas all had a similar structure: opening chorus, arias without recitatives, closing chorale. For the performances in Leipzig, Bach added recitatives, to make the libretto closer related* to the Bible text of that particular Sunday. He would also insert a chorale in the middle, so he could perform Part I of the cantata (with the newly written closing chorale at the end of that half) before the sermon, and Part II (with the existing closing chorale at the end) after the sermon.

During the 1723 Trinity season he had already done this successfully with cantata 147 for the Feast of the Visitation, and cantata 186 for the 7th Sunday after Trinity, but he truly mastered it with cantata 70, Wachet! betet! betet! wachet!, originally written for 2nd Advent in Weimar in 1716, but now dramatically expanded for the 26th Sunday after Trinity, November 21, 1723. As last week, it is a Judgment Day cantata, and the stunning recitatives for bass and trumpet make that absolutely clear, but there is much more sparkle in the music and hope in the text than last week, because of the link with Advent.

As a child I loved the tenor aria from this cantata, exactly because of that sparkle and lightness in the music and the hope in the text. Also, I have beautiful but emotional memories connected with a performance of this cantata during the First Advent church service in my parents’ church in the Hague, only three days after my mom’s funeral service in that same church. The sixth anniversary of her passing was yesterday, so, as it must have felt good to Bach to end the church year** with this cantata in 1723, it feels meaningful to me to end my 1723 Trinity special series with this cantata.

For my own sentimental reasons, and for an excellent rendition of the tenor aria by Kurt Equiluz and the bass recitatives and aria by Ruud van der Meer, I would listen to the Harnoncourt recording of this cantata. But the opening chorus and some other movements in the first half are a bit hard to listen to, so I’ll give you just the second half of that Harnoncourt recording, here on Spotify.

For the entire cantata, I recommend listening to Bach Collegium Japan’s recording on Spotify. Soloists: Yukari Nonoshita, Robin Blaze, Gerd Türk, Peter Kooij. This is from the same album that has their performance of cantata 60 I recommended two weeks ago.

Find the German texts with English translations here, and the score here.

Apart from the beautiful light in the tenor aria, and the incredible writing for bass and trumpet, listen for two special chorales:

In the bass recitative in the second half (movement 9), the text mentions “der Posaunen Schall” (the sound of the trumpet, meaning the trumpet that announces Christ coming down from the heaven as Judge at the end of times) and then immediately after the bass sings that word, the trumpet plays a chorale, which the congregation in Bach’s time would have recognized as emphasis of the Last Judgment theme:

Indeed the time is here
when God’s Son will come
[in His great glory
to judge the wicked and the righteous.]
Then laughter will be rare,
when everything goes up in flames,
as Peter bore witness.

At the very end, Bach uses the closing chorale from the original Weimar Advent cantata, and gives it as much hope and light as possible, in three ways. First, in the melody of the chorale, which the congregation would have recognized as the to them very well-known “Meinen Jesum laß ich nicht”:

I shall not leave my Jesus.
Since he has given himself on me,
my duty therefore demands
that I should cling to him like a limpet;
he is the light of my life;
I shall not leave my Jesus

Second, in the addition of three shimmering string parts above the regular four choral parts. Third, in the actual text he uses here, which confirms the light (Jesum wünsch ich und sein Licht / I wish for Jesus and his light) and confirms the melody at the very end: Meinen Jesum laß ich nicht.

*The texts of the Advent cantatas were not that far removed from the new texts as we might think. In this case, the reading for the Second Sunday in Advent (Luke 21: 25-36) linked the first coming of Christ (Advent) to his second coming as judge at the end of times, which is the reading for the 26th Sunday after Trinity (Matthew 25: 31-46).

**The new church year begins with a festival on the first Sunday of Advent, followed by an introspective period for the remaining weeks of Advent (the four weeks before Christmas).